Eyes of Things
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Information | |
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Funding agency | European Commission |
Framework Programme | Horizon 2020 |
Project type | Innovation Action |
Participants | University of Castilla–La Mancha, AWAIBA, Movidius, THALES, DFKI, Fluxguide, Evercam, nVISO |
Start | January 2015 |
End | June 2018 |
Website | http://eyesofthings.eu |
Eyes of Things (EoT) is the name of a project funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme under grant agreement number 643924.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7] The purpose of the project, which is funded under the Smart Cyber-physical systems topic,[8] is to develop a generic hardware-software platform for embedded, efficient (i.e. battery-operated, wearable, mobile), computer vision, including deep learning inference.
On November 29, 2018, the European Space Agency announced that it was testing the suitability of the device for space applications in advance of a flight in a Cubesat.[9]
Motivation
[edit]EoT is based on the following tenets:[10]
- Future embedded systems will have more intelligence and cognitive functionality. Vision is paramount to such intelligent capacity
- Unlike other sensors, vision requires intensive processing. Power consumption must be optimized if vision is to be used in mobile and wearable applications
- Cloud processing of edge-captured images is not sustainable. The sheer amount of visual data generated cannot be transferred to the cloud. Bandwidth is not sufficient and cloud servers cannot cope with it.
Partners
[edit]- VISILAB group at University of Castilla–La Mancha (Coordinator)
- Movidius
- Awaiba
- Thales Security Solutions & Systems
- DFKI
- Fluxguide
- Evercam
- nVISO
Awards
[edit]- 2019 Electronic Component and Systems Innovation Award by the European Commission
- 2018 HiPEAC Tech Transfer Award
- 2018 EC Innovation Radar - highlighting excellent innovations Award
- 2018 Internet of Things (IoT) Technology Research Award Pilot by Google
- 2016 Semifinalist "THE VISION SHOW STARTUP COMPETITION", Global Association for Vision Information, Boston US
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Deniz, Oscar; Vallez, Noelia; Espinosa-Aranda, Jose L.; Rico-Saavedra, Jose M.; Parra-Patino, Javier; Bueno, Gloria; Moloney, David; Dehghani, Alireza; Dunne, Aubrey; Pagani, Alain; Krauss, Stephan; Reiser, Ruben; Waeny, Martin; Sorci, Matteo; Llewellynn, Tim; Fedorczak, Christian; Larmoire, Thierry; Herbst, Marco; Seirafi, Andre; Seirafi, Kasra (21 May 2017). "Eyes of Things". Sensors. 17 (5): 1173. Bibcode:2017Senso..17.1173D. doi:10.3390/s17051173. PMC 5470918. PMID 28531141.
- ^ "Smart doll fitted with AI chip can read your child's emotions". NewScientist.com. Retrieved 26 January 2018.
- ^ Emotion-reading doll is a somewhat creepy example of what´s possible with AI, by Luke Dormehl, Digital Trends, June 22, 2017
- ^ Low-Cost Visually Intelligent Robots with EoT, D. Moloney, D. Pena, A. Dunne et al. Workshop Robotics: Science and Systems (RSS 2016), Michigan (USA) [1]
- ^ Kick off of new 'Eyes of Things' project. CORDIS Wire
- ^ Computer vision platform being developed by European Commission
- ^ HiPEAC members will coordinate a European project on Smart Cyber-Physical Systems, HiPEAC Info n. 41, page 12, January 2015, [2][permanent dead link ]
- ^ "ICT 2014 - Information and Communications Technologies, Topic: Smart CyberPhysical Systems". Europa.eu. Retrieved 26 January 2018.
- ^ ESA (2018-12-04). "ESA team blasts Intel's new AI chip with radiation at CERN". European Space Agency. Retrieved 2018-12-04.
- ^ A Vision for the Future. D. Moloney, O. Deniz. IEEE Consumer Electronics 4(2), April 2015, [3]